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Now Congress wants answers. In November, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., authored legislation creating an office to study UAPs governmentwide and report to Congress. Then the Defense Department tried to stake its claim to the issue, shortly after announcing the formation of its own UAP unit. Its team would investigate only UAPs spotted in sensitive military airspace, and it would operate without congressional supervision. Some criticized the half-measure as a preemptive ploy to avert oversight, though the Pentagon denies those claims.
But Gillibrand and a bipartisan bloc of lawmakers, including Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., were not deterred. They steered legislation through Congress ― attached as an amendment to the annual defense bill, sent to President Joe Biden's desk Wednesday to be signed into law ― that establishes a new office to study UAPs. The amendment also requires unclassified reports on UAPs delivered to Congress each year, as well as semiannual classified briefings to legislators.
unclassified reports on UAPs delivered to Congress each year,
originally posted by: face23785
originally posted by: Gothmog
a reply to: AstroDog
This is probably going to be super unpopular opinion around here, but they should not be told a single thing more than is absolutely necessary or obvious.
Don't worry , they wont be .
I don't think most of them have the required security clearance.
originally posted by: Gothmog
Gillibrand is just playing games with her constituency and the general public in the name of money .
Just like Harry Reid did .
Driving Force for UFO Answers